The Bible's Better Half

The immensely popular book The Da Vinci Code is a groundbreaking work that
causes the reader to ask a profoundly personal question: Who did I loan my copy to and
when will the five people they loaned it to give it back?

And thats not all. The book also challenges our basic
understanding of biblical history and the theology that created the modern church. Even
though The Da Vinci Code is a work of fiction (much like the upcoming biography The
Greatness of George W. Bush), its descriptions of early church history are purportedly
true, leaving the reader with the disturbing notion that the creation of the Bible itself
was compromised by one major problem: They left out the good stuff.

According to The Da Vinci Code (and LOTS of respected academic
literature, which I would have read but for my longstanding principle of being 100-percent
research-free), the Roman emperor Constantine conspired with the early church
hierarchywhich may have included Karl Roveto create a set of scriptures that
emphasized Jesus divinity rather than his more accessible humanity. Whole parts of
Jesus life and legacy have been left out, depriving us of a fuller sense of what it
must have been like to be the Son of God during, say, snack time in kindergarten.
(TEACHER: Goodness me, whered all those extra cookies come from?)

Nor do we have a record of his teenage years, a typically difficult
time that youngsters could better deal with had the biblical narrative included
inspirational stories of an adolescent Jesus of Nazareth:

EDDIE OF HASKEL: Good morning, Mrs. Nazareth, is Jesus at home? And may
I say you look lovely today. Having children at an early age certainly seems to have
agreed with you.

JESUS: Cut it out, Eddie. And that reminds me, you are SO not going to
be one of my disciples when I grow up.

EDDIE: Fine with me, Mr. Alpha and Omega Junior. Me and Lumpy have
other plans anyway. Were going to beget thisfishers of fish. As opposed
to that wacky idea of yours.

JESUS: Whatever. Hey, Dad, can we take the car?

JOSEPH: What is a "car," my son?

JESUS: Oops. Never mind.

And while the Bible dwells on the 40 days of temptation before Jesus
starts his ministry, we read nothing about the arguments he must have had with his
teachers who probably wanted him to go to grad school first.

BUT THE BIGGEST problem with the Bible, according to The Da Vinci
Code, is that it only tells half the story of the early churchthe guy
halfand omits much of the legacy of women. Its obvious the early church
fathers didnt run their ideas by the early church ladies, probably for fear of
having Third Century crockery flung at them in disgust. (In fact, some scientists believe
the broken bits of pottery found in archeological digs were not the result of millennial
decay, but were caused by angry women trying to keep priests away from the office
shredders.)

I dont think Im giving away the ending (since its
obvious by Chapter Two) to say that a particularly controversial aspect of the book, if
true, would add a second shortest verse to the Bible. Specifically, "Jesus
dated."

Lets face it, Constantine and his scribes couldnt have
included scripture recounting Jesus first social engagement with a girl (JESUS: Open
thine eyes, and sin no more. GIRL: Look, Im not really blind, okay? Its just
an expression...), much less have the Bible making reference to the more
controversial possibility that Jesus may have been married. (And it would have been the perfect
marriage, with minimal chores! Sigh.)

No, the state-sanctioned church wanted to keep Jesus above the people,
so the church could be the go-between for their salvation. Had the full story been told of
Jesus empowerment of his followers, todays ecclesial hierarchy would be like
the Maytag Repairman. There might be a phone, but it wouldnt ring.

As it is, the deeper experience of community and gender inclusiveness
within the early church is little mentioned by scripture, and few other documents have
survived to fill in these sinful omissions. All we have is the official Bible, the still
unreleased Dead Sea Scrolls (TRANSLATOR: Whats another word for "equal"?
Oh, I know: "male headship."), and some bits of parchment containing the
earliest known recipe for Jell-O with miniature marshmallows. (Some Christian sects may
have added coconut to this ancient potluck dish, but again, the flawed biblical record is
unable to debunk this egregious heresy.)

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